What are the best certifications you have ever taken?Which other certifications do you recommend getting?
I have splunk power user and SAA-C03I really think I should get CCNA but I wanna do CISSP just because cybersecurity interests me.(I still work in hell desk)
>>108107272I got my CCNA in Uni through a two semester course, I think it's the best accessible certification for networking, however, I am in the same predicament as you, I'm stuck between getting a CompTIA Security+ cert or the Google Cybersecurity one.
>>108107260do you think random /g/ idiot using gentoo who reads the manual can pass rhca?
>>108107729They can probably memorize all the answers off a study guide just like the guy who won a French Scrabble competition without knowing how to speak any French at all.
Never taken any, I have a high school diploma. I have mixed feelings about certs, they're just a waste of money, you can learn all the material without actually paying for the cert and I usually don't even look at the certs and degrees of people when I interview them and no one I know does either. If I need to know your technical knowledge I will ask about it in a in-person interview (so I don't have to care about AI retards) and if they're Indian I'm just automatically rating them as candidates with low technical abilities cause while Indians are fine for help desk they are useless at technician level or above.
I've got the CISSP. The way the algorithm of that thing works these days makes you feel like you've failed 15 minutes into it. It actually felt easier than the sec+ and cysa+ since I considered it a practice run 15 minutes in and didn't have the pressure of passing anymoreDefinitely unlocks doors but you need to be full-time security for 4 years as one of the requirements
after working in a cloud service provider i can say that nearly everything in Net+ is valid stuff that you will come across in the real world. they do a good job of keeping the information up to date.
>>108107700I work for a university and can get my Bachelor's degree for full ride but I'm too lazy and hate my job lmao. I know I should do it.But I should look into classed that offer CCNA
>>108107260I think they're complete wastes of time and money unless your company pays for them. But at that point you're already employed, so what's the fucking purpose?
>>108107260I worked in a data center for 5 years, then left and got a degree in physics, now in devops. Certs have never been needed in my experience. They just assume I am smart enough to do things.>t. White Brit
>>108107272>>108107700Think I'll just focus on getting a bachelor's first since I can do it for free full ride. Otherwise the CCNA since it will open more doors
>>108109047>I usually don't even look at the certs and degrees of people when I interview them.>if they're Indian I'm just automatically rating them as candidates with low technical abilities